Los Angeles Times

My 47th blind date

MY EXPECTATIO­NS ON FINDING LOVE WERE PRETTY LOW AFTER BEING SET UP 46 TIMES. THEN I OPENED MY DOOR

- BY RHONDA SOKOLOW

IRECEIVED A call some time ago from a childhood friend who lived in Denver, telling me she had a really great guy for me to meet. He had grown up in Los Angeles and was going to be back in L.A. for a family wedding in early July.

I was less than enthused. A guy who lived in Denver? What good would that do me? I was living in L.A. and had no plans to leave. But I didn’t want to be rude, so I agreed to meet him.

He finally called — on the Fourth of July. He wanted to get together that night. Really? Like, I was just sitting around with nothing better to do than wait for his call? (Well, I was just sitting around, but I didn’t feel like missing an evening watching fireworks on TV by myself.)

Instead, we made plans to get together for dinner that Sunday evening, even though, as a real estate agent, I typically work on Sundays. But I just wanted to get the date over with and not “ruin” a Friday or Saturday night. We decided to go to my favorite restaurant, Inn of the Seventh Ray in Topanga Canyon. At least the atmosphere would be great even if the date was the usual bust.

I finished my open house that Sunday, came home and grudgingly got ready for my 47th blind date since my divorce seven years earlier. It was a period of my life my mother had taken to calling the “Seven-Year Plague.”

After 46 blind dates that were mostly disastrous — and yes, I did keep count — my expectatio­ns were not high.

After my divorce, I found it hard to meet eligible men. As a real estate agent, I meet plenty of people, but they are usually couples looking to buy. Plus, I don’t like to mix business and personal. So friends and family were always trying to set me up with the “perfect” guy. I had survived so many evenings of challengin­g conversati­on, no attraction and boredom that I was resigned to add one more bad date to the list. It would at least give me another funny story to share.

No. 47 showed up on time. I opened the door and was overcome.

Loren had the most dazzling smile. He was wearing white summer jeans and a green checkered shirt. And he was holding a bunch of gardenias he had cut from his mother’s garden. We went to dinner and spent three hours talking, came back to my house and talked until the wee hours.

He had a great personalit­y, was intelligen­t and had a wonderful sense of humor. Moreover, he wanted all the same things in life I did. He told me — on the first date! — he wanted to get married and have children.

We were inseparabl­e the rest of that week.

I tried to impress him one night with a fancy dinner. But I don’t really cook. So I put three whole cooked chickens on the barbecue. (He didn’t need to know they were already cooked and not by me.) We went to Disneyland. And I accompanie­d him to his family wedding. He told me a “thunderbol­t” had hit him, and he just knew. This was it. Billy Ocean’s song “Suddenly” came on the radio the night we met, and that became “our” song: “Suddenly, life has new meaning to me ...”

Indeed, life did have new meaning.

The last night before he went back to Denver we went to my parents’ house. My mother pulled out all the stops — a beautiful table set with sterling, crystal and china. We dined outside with Italian music serenading us and a bottle of Lafite Rothschild from my father’s wine cellar. They loved him.

The following day, Loren went back to Denver. He said he wanted to move to Los Angeles, so that took care of one big problem. Two weeks later, I was on a plane to get a glimpse into his life. He picked me up at the airport with a dozen long-stem roses. I fell into his arms. He took me to a romantic restaurant where Champagne was waiting and told me he wanted to spend the rest of his life with me. I said yes. Unbeknowns­t to me, Loren had called my parents and asked their permission to marry me. He said he had invited me to come to Denver because he couldn’t wait any longer to ask me to marry him and didn’t want to tell our future children that we’d gotten engaged on the phone. (My childhood friend Illece was flabbergas­ted. She had thought we would hit it off, but engaged in two weeks was a shock.)

That night, we phoned my parents to tell them we were officially engaged. The next morning, my mother was waiting at the temple as soon as it opened to book our wedding.

The Seven-Year Plague was over.

> The author has been married 34 years and has two grown children. She has been a real estate agent in the Los Angeles area for more than 40 years.

 ?? Liana Jegers For The Times ??
Liana Jegers For The Times

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